New racial categories emerge with the progress of history, as new name
s reinterpret the existence and chronicle the insertion of demographic
subgroups into a population. The analysis of categorical change is ha
rdly unimportant work. However, we as researchers would be lax in our
analyses if we did not understand that as racial categories change, so
do racial hierarchies. To know what a group calls itself is only part
of the story. Knowing the cultural, sociological and political meanin
g of the name, and how the category fits into a racialized - that is t
o say hierarchical - social structure, is just as important, if not mo
re so.